Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP leaders blast racial hate

Few call out Trump over his remarks

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

NEW YORK — The Senate’s top Republican on Wednesday condemned the “messages of hate and bigotry” carried by the Ku Klux Klan and white supremacis­ts. But like other top GOP officials, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell did not criticize President Donald Trump, who said a day earlier that white supremacis­ts don’t bear all the blame for last weekend’s violence in Charlottes­ville, Va.

“We all have a responsibi­lity to stand against hate and violence, wherever it raises its evil head,” McConnell said in a statement, noting that white supremacis­ts were planning a rally in his home state of Kentucky.

“Their messages of hate

and bigotry are not welcome in Kentucky and should not be welcome anywhere in America,” he said.

McConnell’s statement comes as the Republican Party grapples with the latest political crisis created by its leader. This one follows a violent weekend clash between white supremacis­ts and counterpro­testers that left more than a dozen people injured. One woman was killed when a car was driven into a crowd of the counterpro­testers, and two Virginia state troopers died in a helicopter crash while monitoring the protests.

Trump said Tuesday that he sympathize­d with some of those who were protesting the proposed removal of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Charlottes­ville, and that there were “some very bad people” among the neo-Nazis and KKK members who organized Saturday’s protest. He also placed blame for Saturday’s violence on “both sides,” and said “you also had people that were very fine people, on both sides.”

The comments sparked a backlash across the political spectrum. Few Republican officehold­ers defended the president, but few called him out by name over them either.

One who did call him out, South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, said Wednesday that the president “took a step backward by again suggesting there is moral equivalenc­y between the white supremacis­t neo-Nazis and KKK members who attended the Charlottes­ville rally” and the people demonstrat­ing against them.

“Many Republican­s do not agree with and will fight back against the idea that the party of Lincoln has a welcome mat out for the David Dukes of the world,” Graham added.

Former Republican Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush weighed in on the issue, releasing a joint statement that stopped short of criticizin­g Trump directly.

“America must always reject racial bigotry, anti-Semitism, and hatred in all forms,” the Bushes said.

MILITARY CONDEMNATI­ONS

The U.S. military’s most senior leaders, too, have publicly repudiated the racial violence in Charlottes­ville, declaring that the nation’s armed forces as unequivoca­lly against hatred.

By midmorning Wednesday, the military’s four service chiefs each had issued firm statements on the matter.

The military’s first reaction came from Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson, who Saturday night, well before the dust had settled in Charlottes­ville, issued a news release calling the bloodshed “shameful.”

The Navy, he added, must be “the safest possible place — a team as strong and tough as we can be, saving violence only for our enemies.”

Top officers from the Army, Marines and Air Force made similarly sharp statements.

In a tweet posted early Wednesday, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley said racial hatred runs counter to the military’s values and “everything we’ve stood for since 1775.”

Milley’s counterpar­t in the Marines, Gen. Robert Neller, offered a similar rebuke Tuesday night. “No place for racial hatred or extremism in USMC,” he tweeted.

Neller’s spokesman, Lt. Col. Eric Dent, said as the top Marine, Neller felt compelled to reaffirm “who we are and what we stand for.”

“It was not,” Dent said via email, “meant as a stab at the president.”

Also Wednesday, the Air Force’s chief, Gen. David Goldfein, said on Twitter that he is of like mind.

“I stand with my fellow service chiefs in saying we’re always stronger together — it’s who we are as #Airmen,” he wrote.

TRUMP GETS SUPPORT

Though Trump’s overall approval rating is low, a small group of supporters rose to his defense, praising him for his response to the violence in Charlottes­ville.

“You got racism in both factions, on both sides,” former New Hampshire GOP Chairman Jack Kimball said. “Trump has zero fault here. None.”

The stakes are high for Republican­s, some of whom face midterm elections next year. Also, Republican­s need the president’s support as they prepare to tackle some tough issues. They hope to work with him to enact legislatio­n on infrastruc­ture and tax changes, for example.

The political tap dance has frustrated at least one member of Trump’s diversity council, chief executive officer of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Javier Palomarez, who called Trump’s response to the Charlottes­ville violence “a monumental failure in leadership.”

He challenged those who denounced racial bias in general terms but didn’t call out the president by name.

“That’s a sign of weakness, and I don’t think the American people and the Republican Party is going to forget,” said Palomarez, who noted the he will remain on Trump’s diversity council “for now.”

Trump loyalists in key states said they are ready to fight for their leader. And there were signs that the divide between the loyalists and establishm­ent Republican­s is already shaping the midterm political landscape, when Republican control of Congress will be at stake.

“We’ve always had these weak, skittish, so-called Republican­s in the D.C. crowd. They’re always peeing their pants,” said Corey Stewart, a former Trump aide who has opened a 2018 Senate bid in Virginia.

Nevada Republican Danny Tarkanian, who is challengin­g Republican U.S. Sen. Dean Heller, said those criticizin­g Trump’s response to the white supremacis­t rally were “splitting hairs.”

“It was clear the media went out of their way to find fault with his statement,” Tarkanian said.

Heller, who is considered one of the most endangered Republican­s in the nation heading into the 2018 election, posted a statement on Twitter late Tuesday that stopped short of criticizin­g the president: “There is no defense or justificat­ion for evil in the form of white supremacis­ts and Nazis. None,” he wrote.

‘YOU JUST MAGNIFIED HER’

In Charlottes­ville, meanwhile, the mother of the woman hit and killed by the car at Saturday’s protest urged mourners at a Wednesday memorial service to “make my child’s death worthwhile” by confrontin­g injustice the way her daughter did.

“They tried to kill my child to shut her up. Well, guess what? You just magnified her,” said Susan Bro, who received a standing ovation from the hundreds who packed a downtown theater to remember Heather Heyer, 32.

Heyer was eulogized as a woman with a powerful sense of fairness. Many of the mourners wore purple, her favorite color.

State troopers were stationed on streets around the Paramount Theater, just blocks from where Heyer died. White nationalis­ts who had vowed to show up outside the service were nowhere to be seen.

Heyer, a white legal assistant from Charlottes­ville, was killed and 19 others were injured when the car plowed into counterpro­testers who had taken to the streets to condemn what was believed to be the country’s biggest gathering of white nationalis­ts in at least a decade.

The driver of the car — James Alex Fields Jr., 20, of Ohio — was arrested Saturday and charged with murder and other offenses, according to police.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Wednesday that Fields’ case could be prosecuted as a hate crime, saying federal authoritie­s still investigat­ing the case could decide to prosecute the driver in a number of ways.

Sessions cautioned that no federal charges were imminent.

Trump on Wednesday tweeted for the first time about Heyer, calling her “beautiful and incredible” and a “truly special young woman.”

Separately, two women who were injured when the car rammed into the protesters filed a lawsuit Tuesday seeking damages from the rally’s organizer and more than two dozen leaders, groups and websites affiliated with the self-proclaimed alt-right.

The lawsuit was filed in circuit court in Charlottes­ville by Tadrint Washington and her sister Micah Washington, who said they were physically and emotionall­y injured by Saturday’s events.

 ?? AP/The Daily Progress/ANDREW SHURTLEFF ?? Marcus Martin and his fiancee, Marissa Blair, attend a memorial Wednesday in Charlottes­ville, Va., for Heather Heyer, who was killed Saturday when a car plowed into a crowd protesting a white supremacis­t rally.
AP/The Daily Progress/ANDREW SHURTLEFF Marcus Martin and his fiancee, Marissa Blair, attend a memorial Wednesday in Charlottes­ville, Va., for Heather Heyer, who was killed Saturday when a car plowed into a crowd protesting a white supremacis­t rally.

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